Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Search for Quebec hiker missing in Adirondacks now likely a recovery mission

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2024 05:45 PM
  • Search for Quebec hiker missing in Adirondacks now likely a recovery mission

Authorities in New York state say the search for a 22-year-old Quebec hiker who went missing in the Adirondacks more than a week ago is now likely a recovery mission. 

The New York State Forest Rangers say heavy snow and cold temperatures have made the search "essentially impossible," and future efforts will depend on the weather. 

Leo Dufour of Vaudreuil, Que., went hiking on Allen Mountain on Nov. 29, but failed to return the following day as planned.

“When you give it 100 per cent you hope to have some kind of conclusion or result. So it’s extremely hard," said incident Cmdr. Jamison Martin in a Monday briefing to reporters. "You want to do it for the family. You obviously want to find Leo alive. It’s hard from every front."

Martin said snow has fallen every day since Dufour went missing. The hike up and down the mountain is at least 16 kilometres round trip, he said, and the snow is now more than a metre deep at the summit. Temperatures on the mountain, about 25 kilometres south of Lake Placid, have dropped below minus 30 degrees C at times, said Capt. Sarah Geesler. 

"The search conditions are about as rough as you could imagine," Martin said. “If you stop moving … your body’s going to shut down in a matter of hours, no matter how fit you are. You just can’t survive it."

Martin said about 60 rangers have searched extensively in the area, and the last clue they found as to Dufour's whereabouts was a water bottle near the summit. Dufour's car was found covered in snow at the trailhead, and Martin said rescuers believe they found a one-way set of footprints heading up the mountain. 

"Anything's possible," he said when asked if Dufour could still be alive. "He might not be up on Allen. But everything points that he is."

The rangers said the search for Dufour will continue on a limited basis when the weather allows it, but it's currently very difficult to get rescuers into the area. Martin said future efforts will focus on flying rescuers onto the mountain so they can search from the top down. 

MORE National ARTICLES

50 tonnes of 'fatbergs' removed from Richmond sewers, Metro Vancouver says

50 tonnes of 'fatbergs' removed from Richmond sewers, Metro Vancouver says
Workers in Metro Vancouver have chiselled away about 50 tonnes of so-called "fatbergs" that have clogged the sewer system and prompted a reminder to residents not to dump grease down the drain. 

50 tonnes of 'fatbergs' removed from Richmond sewers, Metro Vancouver says

Body found in Cowichan Bay

Body found in Cowichan Bay
Police on eastern Vancouver Island say they have found the body of a 26-year-old man in the waters of Cowichan Bay. R-C-M-P say the man was last seen Monday and reported missing on Wednesday.

Body found in Cowichan Bay

Man charged in child pornography

Man charged in child pornography
Police in New Westminster say a 45-year-old man has been charged with one count of possession of child pornography.  They say in a statement that the man was arrested last July and he's since been released from custody with several "strict" court-ordered conditions. 

Man charged in child pornography

Wind warning for B.C.'s south coast with gusts up to 90 km/h expected overnight

Wind warning for B.C.'s south coast with gusts up to 90 km/h expected overnight
Coastal British Columbia will see strong winds overnight with gusts that could reach speeds of between 90 and 110 kilometres per hour.  Warnings from Environment Canada span the Greater Victoria area, the southern Gulf Islands, eastern Vancouver Island, southern parts of Metro Vancouver and Haida Gwaii.

Wind warning for B.C.'s south coast with gusts up to 90 km/h expected overnight

New regulations allow Canada Post to ship prohibited firearms returned in gun buyback

New regulations allow Canada Post to ship prohibited firearms returned in gun buyback
The federal government is giving Canada Post the ability to store and transport prohibited firearms in new regulations that bring the retail gun buyback program one step closer to beginning. An order-in-council dated Oct. 16 allows for prohibited assault-style firearms to be removed from safes at firearms retailers, transported and ultimately destroyed. 

New regulations allow Canada Post to ship prohibited firearms returned in gun buyback

Joly faces calls for probe in death of woman Canada refused to repatriate from Syria

Joly faces calls for probe in death of woman Canada refused to repatriate from Syria
Advocates want Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly to call an impartial investigation into the death of a Canadian woman the federal government refused to repatriate from a Syrian detention camp. In a letter to Joly, Sen. Kim Pate and human rights activist Alex Neve say the Quebec woman died unexpectedly just over a week ago in Turkey.

Joly faces calls for probe in death of woman Canada refused to repatriate from Syria